Cited by
1. Modelling spatiotemporal trends in range shifts of marine commercial fish species driven by climate change surrounding the Antarctic Peninsula
2. The Cumulative Effects of Fishing, Plankton Productivity, and Marine Mammal Consumption in a Marine Ecosystem
3. Responses of ecological indicators to fishing pressure under environmental change: exploring non-linearity and thresholds
4. Opportunities for agent‐based modelling in human dimensions of fisheries
5. Evaluating impacts of pulse fishing on the effectiveness of seasonal closure
6. Evaluating impacts of imprecise parameters on the performance of an ecosystem model OSMOSE-JZB
7. Incorporating environmental forcing in developing ecosystem-based fisheries management strategies
8. Ecosystem-based reference points under varying plankton productivity states and fisheries management strategies
9. Reference levels of ecosystem indicators at multispecies maximum sustainable yield
10. Habitat complexity influences the structure of food webs in Great Barrier Reef seagrass meadows
11. Capturing the big picture of Mediterranean marine biodiversity with an end-to-end model of climate and fishing impacts
12. Calibrating process-based marine ecosystem models: An example case using Atlantis
13. Emergence of negative trophic level-size relationships from a size-based, individual-based multispecies fish model
14. Protection from illegal fishing and shark recovery restructures mesopredatory fish communities on a coral reef
15. Implementation of an end-to-end model of the Gulf of Lions ecosystem (NW Mediterranean Sea). II. Investigating the effects of high trophic levels on nutrients and plankton dynamics and associated feedbacks
16. Species‐specific ontogenetic diet shifts attenuate trophic cascades and lengthen food chains in exploited ecosystems
17. An End-to-End Model Reveals Losers and Winners in a Warming Mediterranean Sea
18. Implementation of an end-to-end model of the Gulf of Lions ecosystem (NW Mediterranean Sea). I. Parameterization, calibration and evaluation
19. Climate change impacts on marine ecosystems through the lens of the size spectrum
20. Building bridges between global information systems on marine organisms and ecosystem models
21. An end-to-end model to evaluate the sensitivity of ecosystem indicators to track fishing impacts
22. A computational approach to managing coupled human–environmental systems: the POSEIDON model of ocean fisheries
23. Next Generation Numerical Models to Address a Complex Future
24. Systematic deviations from linear size spectra of lake fish communities are correlated with predator-prey interactions and lake-use intensity
25. Spawning stock recruitment creates misleading dynamics under predation release in ecosystem and multi-species models
26. Towards end-to-end (E2E) modelling in a consistent NPZD-F modelling framework (ECOSMO E2E_v1.0): application to the North Sea and Baltic Sea
27. Trawl ban in a heavily exploited marine environment: Responses in population dynamics of four stomatopod species
28. A general approach to incorporating spatial and temporal variation in individual-based models of fish populations with application to Atlantic mackerel
29. The specificity of marine ecological indicators to fishing in the face of environmental change: A multi-model evaluation
30. Changes in fish diversity and community structure in the central and southern Yellow Sea from 2003 to 2015
31. Modeling the coastal ecosystem complex: present situation and challenges
32. Identification of the main processes underlying ecosystem functioning in the Eastern English Channel, with a focus on flatfish species, as revealed through the application of the Atlantis end-to-end model
33. Producing Distribution Maps for a Spatially-Explicit Ecosystem Model Using Large Monitoring and Environmental Databases and a Combination of Interpolation and Extrapolation
34. Improving Marine Ecosystem Models with Biochemical Tracers
35. Producing distribution maps for informing ecosystem-based fisheries management using a comprehensive survey database and spatio-temporal models
36. Risky business: The combined effects of fishing and changes in primary productivity on fish communities
37. A protocol for the intercomparison of marine fishery and ecosystem models: Fish-MIP v1.0
38. A mass balanced model of trophic structure and energy flows of a semi-closed marine ecosystem
39. Spatial and temporal dynamics of predator-prey species interactions off western Canada
40. Ecosystem modeling in the Gulf of Mexico: current status and future needs to address ecosystem-based fisheries management and restoration activities
41. An individual-based model for simulating the ecosystem dynamics of Jiaozhou Bay, China
42. Beyond big fish: The case for more detailed representations of top predators in marine ecosystem models
43. Evaluation of models capacity to predict size spectra parameters in ecosystems under stress
44. Modeling What We Sample and Sampling What We Model: Challenges for Zooplankton Model Assessment
45. From Bacteria to Whales: Using Functional Size Spectra to Model Marine Ecosystems
46. From data rich to data-limited harvest strategies—does more data mean better management?
47. Progress towards a next-generation fisheries ecosystem model for the northern Gulf of Mexico
48. A sequential approach to calibrate ecosystem models with multiple time series data
49. Ecosystem effects of invertebrate fisheries
50. Ecosystem indicators—accounting for variability in species’ trophic levels
51. Trends and management implications of human-influenced life-history changes in marine ectotherms
52. Modelling climate change impacts on marine fish populations: process-based integration of ocean warming, acidification and other environmental drivers
53. Modelling food web structure using an end-to-end approach in the coastal ecosystem of the Gulf of Gabes (Tunisia)
54. Management strategy evaluation using the individual-based, multispecies modeling approach OSMOSE
55. Exploring the spatial distribution patterns of South African Cape hakes using generalised additive models
56. The efficacy of fisheries closure in rebuilding depleted stocks: Lessons from size-spectrum modeling
57. A guinea pig's tale: learning to review end-to-end marine ecosystem models for management applications
58. Acoustic data collected on pelagic fishing vessels throughout an annual cycle: Operational framework, interpretation of observations, and future perspectives
59. Balanced exploitation and coexistence of interacting, size-structured, fish species
60. Assumptions behind size-based ecosystem models are realistic
61. Comparing model predictions for ecosystem-based management1
62. Catch-per-unit-effort and size spectra of lake fish assemblages reflect underlying patterns in ecological conditions and anthropogenic activities across regional and local scales1
63. The need for a protean fisheries science to address the degradation of exploited aquatic ecosystems
64. Contributions of body size, habitat and taxonomy to predictions of temperate Australian fish diets
65. Ecosystem models for fisheries management: finding the sweet spot
66. Estimating natural mortality rates and simulating fishing scenarios for Gulf of Mexico red grouper (Epinephelus morio) using the ecosystem model OSMOSE-WFS
68. Quantifying the Trophic Importance of Gulf Menhaden within the Northern Gulf of Mexico Ecosystem
69. Fishing impact in Mediterranean ecosystems: an EcoTroph modeling approach
70. The predictive potential of early life stage individual-based models (IBMs): an example for Atlantic cod Gadus morhua in the North Sea
71. Including foraging arena and top-down controls improves the modeling of trophic flows and fishing impacts in aquatic food webs
72. The global ocean is an ecosystem: simulating marine life and fisheries
73. Size-Based Hydroacoustic Measures of Within-Season Fish Abundance in a Boreal Freshwater Ecosystem
74. Seasonal variability of bull and tiger shark presence on the west coast of Reunion Island, western Indian Ocean
75. What can exploratory modelling tell us about the ecobiology of European sea bass (
Dicentrarchus labrax
): a comprehensive overview
76. Evaluation of the trophic structure of the West Florida Shelf in the 2000s using the ecosystem model OSMOSE
77. Size structure, not metabolic scaling rules, determines fisheries reference points
78. When 1+1 can be >2: Uncertainties compound when simulating climate, fisheries and marine ecosystems
79. Changes in the exploited demersal fish assemblages in the Southern Grand Banks (NAFO Divisions 3NO): 2002–2013
80. Ecosystem modelling in the southern Benguela: comparisons of Atlantis, Ecopath with Ecosim, and OSMOSE under fishing scenarios
81. Spatial and body-size dependent response of marine pelagic communities to projected global climate change
82. Estimating the economic loss of recent North Atlantic fisheries management
83. Using delta generalized additive models to produce distribution maps for spatially explicit ecosystem models
84. Characterizing foodweb structure to identify potential ecosystem effects of fishing in the Ross Sea, Antarctica
85. A discrete mathematical extension of conceptual ecological models – Application for the SE Florida shelf
86. Emergent Global Patterns of Ecosystem Structure and Function from a Mechanistic General Ecosystem Model
87. Combined Fishing and Climate Forcing in the Southern Benguela Upwelling Ecosystem: An End-to-End Modelling Approach Reveals Dampened Effects
88. An end-to-end coupled model ROMS-N
2
P
2
Z
2
D
2
-OSMOSE of the southern Benguela foodweb: parameterisation, calibration and pattern-oriented validation
90. In situ measurements of the speed of Peruvian anchovy schools
91. Quantifying effects of abiotic and biotic drivers on community dynamics with multivariate autoregressive (MAR) models
92. Stock–recruitment relations controlled by feeding interactions alone
93. An ecosystem modelling framework for incorporating climate regime shifts into fisheries management
94. Trade-offs associated with different modeling approaches for assessment of fish and shellfish responses to climate change
95. On the use of biomass size spectra linear adjustments to design ecosystem indicators
96. Why the size structure of marine communities can require decades to recover from fishing
97. From individuals to populations to communities: A dynamic energy budget model of marine ecosystem size-spectrum including life history diversity
98. A mass-balanced pelagic ecosystem model with size-structured behaviourally adaptive zooplankton and fish
99. Robustness of size–structure across ecological networks in pelagic systems
100. Trophic structure in the Gulf of Lions marine ecosystem (north-western Mediterranean Sea) and fishing impacts
101. Bridging marine ecosystem and biogeochemistry research: Lessons and recommendations from comparative studies
102. Ecosystem effects of contemporary life-history changes are comparable to those of fishing
103. Evaluating marine ecosystem health: Case studies of indicators using direct observations and modelling methods
104. From krill to convenience stores: Forecasting the economic and ecological effects of fisheries management on the US West Coast
105. Global in scope and regionally rich: an IndiSeas workshop helps shape the future of marine ecosystem indicators
106. Assessing the sensitivity and specificity of fish community indicators to management action
107. Global assessment of the fishing impacts on the Southern Benguela ecosystem using an EcoTroph modelling approach
108. Fishing destabilizes the biomass flow in the marine size spectrum
109. A Complete Analytic Theory for Structure and Dynamics of Populations and Communities Spanning Wide Ranges in Body Size
110. Footprints of Stress in Communities
111. Functional responses and scaling in predator-prey interactions of marine fishes: contemporary issues and emerging concepts
112. Size spectra of lake fish assemblages: responses along gradients of general environmental factors and intensity of lake-use
113. Spearfishing Regulation Benefits Artisanal Fisheries: The ReGS Indicator and Its Application to a Multiple-Use Mediterranean Marine Protected Area
114. Interpreting the large fish indicator for the Celtic Sea
115. Impacts of Fishing Low-Trophic Level Species on Marine Ecosystems
116. The role of intraguild predation in the population dynamics of small pelagic fish
117. Across ecosystem comparisons of size structure: methods, approaches and prospects
118. The role of agent-based models in wildlife ecology and management
119. Life history strategy and impacts of environmental variability on early life stages of two marine fishes in the North Sea: an individual-based modelling approach
120. On the use of IPCC-class models to assess the impact of climate on Living Marine Resources
121. Development of the EcoQO for the North Sea fish community
122. Modelling the potential impacts of climate change and human activities on the sustainability of marine resources
123. A Jump-Growth Model for Predator–Prey Dynamics: Derivation and Application to Marine Ecosystems
124. Using Ecological Indicators to Assess the Health of Marine Ecosystems
125. Approaches to end-to-end ecosystem models
126. Application of an evolutionary algorithm to the inverse parameter estimation of an individual-based model
127. A study on indicators and reference points for the ecosystem-based resource assessment
128. Spatio-temporal variability in fish-induced predation mortality on plankton: A simulation approach using a coupled trophic model of the Benguela ecosystem
129. Coupling low and high trophic levels models: Towards a pathways-orientated approach for end-to-end models
130. Changes in food web structure under scenarios of overfishing in the southern Benguela: Comparison of the Ecosim and OSMOSE modelling approaches
131. Modelling encounter rates and distribution of mobile predators and prey
132. Two-way coupling versus one-way forcing of plankton and fish models to predict ecosystem changes in the Benguela
133. Diet composition of the Lessepsian bluespotted cornetfish
Fistularia commersonii
in the eastern Mediterranean
134. Notes on nine biological indicators estimable from trawl surveys with an illustrative assessment for North Sea cod
135. Size-spectra dynamics from stochastic predation and growth of individuals
136. Structure and stability in exploited marine fish communities: quantifying critical transitions
137. Exploring the effect of Marine Protected Areas on the dynamics of fish communities in the southern Benguela: an individual-based modelling approach
138. Trophic structure of the Peruvian marine ecosystem in 2000–2006: Insights on the effects of management scenarios for the hake fishery using the IBM trophic model Osmose
139. Indicators of change in the size structure of fish communities: A case study from the south coast of South Africa
140. Cultivation, Allee effect and resilience of large demersal fish populations
141. The sea ahead: challenges to marine biology from seafood sustainability
142. Towards end-to-end models for investigating the effects of climate and fishing in marine ecosystems
143. Model uncertainty in the ecosystem approach to fisheries
144. Modeling environmental effects on the size-structured energy flow through marine ecosystems. Part 2: Simulations
145. Modeling environmental effects on the size-structured energy flow through marine ecosystems. Part 1: The model
146. Alternatives to taxonomic-based approaches to assess changes in transitional water communities
147. A length-based multispecies model for evaluating community responses to fishing
148. Simulating and testing the sensitivity of ecosystem-based indicators to fishing in the southern Benguela ecosystem
149. Size, diversity, dominance and trophic structures of the fish community in a tropical lake: a case study for the Sinazongwe area, Lake Kariba, Zambia
150. Modelling an exploited marine fish community with 15 parameters – results from a simple size-based model
151. How optimal life history changes with the community size-spectrum
152. Towards multidisciplinary indicator dashboards for coral reef fisheries management
153. Using size-based indicators to evaluate the ecosystem effects of fishing
154. A continuous model of biomass size spectra governed by predation and the effects of fishing on them
155. Multispecies Modeling of Fish Populations
156. The sea ahead: challenges to marine biology from seafood sustainability